The Romance LanguagesMartin Harris, Nigel Vincent Croom Helm, 1988 - 500 pàgines Nine Romance languages are discussed first in context of their common Latin origins, and then in individual studies. The final chapter is devoted to Romance-based Creole languages; a genuine innovation in a work of this kind. |
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Resultats 1 - 3 de 67.
Pàgina 59
... grammatical features can be marked on the verb : Pompeius interfecit ' Pompey killed him ' , nego I deny it ' . As this last example shows , a single Latin verb form can thus constitute a com- plete sentence ( even when the verb in ...
... grammatical features can be marked on the verb : Pompeius interfecit ' Pompey killed him ' , nego I deny it ' . As this last example shows , a single Latin verb form can thus constitute a com- plete sentence ( even when the verb in ...
Pàgina 144
... grammatical categories of Portuguese nominal inflection are gender and number . Grammatical gender is in Portuguese a two - term noun classification system whose categories , traditionally labelled ' masculine ' and ' feminine ...
... grammatical categories of Portuguese nominal inflection are gender and number . Grammatical gender is in Portuguese a two - term noun classification system whose categories , traditionally labelled ' masculine ' and ' feminine ...
Pàgina 442
... grammatical gender or case , nor necessarily for number or definiteness . The absence of overt marking is probably due to different factors in three of these four instances . Number and definiteness ( further discussed below ) are ...
... grammatical gender or case , nor necessarily for number or definiteness . The absence of overt marking is probably due to different factors in three of these four instances . Number and definiteness ( further discussed below ) are ...
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adjectives alternations appear areas auxiliary become borrowings Catalan century clauses clitic common complement conditional conjugation consonant construction contrast creoles definite derived determiner dialects direct discussed distinction effect element European example expressed fact feminine final forms French function future gender gerund give given indicative infinitive inflection initial instance Italian Italy language Latin latter less lexical linguistic literally major marked marker masculine meaning morphological nasal nominal normal Note noun object Occitan occur origin paradigms participle particularly past pattern perfect person phonemic phrases plural Portuguese position possible precede preposition present pronouns question reference reflexive relative remains respect result Romance Rumanian seems semantic sentence singular Spanish speakers spoken standard stem stress structure subjunctive suffix syllable tense third person usually varieties verb vowel